I'm hoping to go down either Friday evening or Saturday (weather permitting) to check out the new landscaping and parkspace.

Some highlights of the renovated park:

-An amazing new year-round restaurant called Boxwood - where you can find everything from snacks to go to fine dining morning noon, night and weekends in this glorious park setting. http://boxwoodcafe.ca/

-Outdoor reading rooms with wireless Internet

-Water features

-Modern lighting features to focus on monuments and the library as well as providing an improved safety element

-Public restroom facilities

-A level performance stage where festival events will take place

-Edwardian garden design with plenty of spots to sit and truly soak it all in

I'll take some from my deck tonight. Overall its looking pretty good, and already is getting used by a lot of people.

Personally I doubt theres any way the work will be completed for Friday though, the entire east half of the park (from the statue to the library) is yet to be sodded (the west half was completed by Remembrance Day last year), the fountains aren't finished, and sadly a huge amount of what was supposed to be in the redesign got cut as the project is reportedly massively over budget (to the tune of several million). They've made a lot of progress in the last few weeks though, but considering they were still installing the irrigation system this morning its going to be another 26th ave promenade type grand opening unfortunately, unlike the very sucessful (and completed) reopening of Haultain park last year.

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I really hope this park gets tons of use from the public so it doesn't get overrun with vagrants who end up scaring people off. It is a great opportunity and hopefully a precedent to create more parks like this throughout the core!

I really hope this park gets tons of use from the public so it doesn't get overrun with vagrants who end up scaring people off. It is a great opportunity and hopefully a precedent to create more parks like this throughout the core!

That is exactly the whole point of making parks great places. Until we realize that if we let our parks space deteriorate it will be overrun with vagrants, we will never recognize the importance of proper parks maintenance and design.

Well I managed to get home just at the right time tonight, they were testing the fountains and irrigation system in the park. So I grabbed my camera (as did a half dozen others who were wandering around the park) and headed across the street.

Looking west from the Library

Looking east. There are white LED's around the outside of the pool, which look neat at night

Fountains in the sidewalk between Boxwood and the Parks office

There are LED lights like this buried along the pathways all throughout the park

I would have strong reservations about the creation of any new parks within the City Centre. Why? City parks can lack the natural guardians that streets have, and often creates sightline blockages that aids criminals at concealing criminal activity. Even the best designed park is at risk for crime like drug trafficking and alcohol use.

Instead my thinking goes along the lines of instead of creating a "park", create ribbons of green space, interjected with focal points. Work on improving the streetscape and sidewalk, and lighting beneath railway underpasses. I believe serving the mobility needs of pedestrians is way more important to improving quality of life in City Centre than development of parks. For example, the Stampede Grounds are awful for pedestrians, there are also areas of downtown where sidewalk is non-existent, or the stretches of railroad lines where there are no crossovers for pedestrians.

Sorry for the rant; this weekend I found a cache of spray cans hidden behind some shrouding in a park (which was likely used for graffiti tagging), so I am convinced parks end up all to often fuctioning as places for drug trafficking instead of the beautification that city planners had envisioned.

Even Olympic Plaza which I would say is one of the more pretty parks in the city, and has been wellfunded, it is difficult to cross through without being hassled for money or seeing someone passed out and drunk on a bench.

Putting up a bunch of benches, picnic tables, and a couple of trees can seem like a well meaning idea, but if the park lacks engagement of people throughout the day and night, it might as well be the perfect place to cache spray cans or traffic drugs.

Thanks for posting the photos Mersar. The terminating vista of the Sheldon Chumir Centre looks wicked!

Yep. The city has an image from a postcard circa 1930 of a similar vantage from the roof of the library overlooking the old Colonel Belcher. I'd love to get up on the roof of the library and take that a shot from the same view once everything is finished up.

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Thanks for the pic. It's coming together nicely. Although I like the design of Memorial Park, with its intent to return the park more toward its original design, I'd like to see other new urban park spaces represent more the cutting edge in landscape architecture.

Radley, I'd have to disagree. Parks are fundamental to quality of life in high density urban environments. The problems of some of our urban parks have much more to do with poor design, poor integration with their surroundings and lack of active uses around them. Olympic Plaza may be a well funded park, but it too suffers a lot of design issues. It in fact is up for a re-design.

Does anyone have a picture of the park before the reno's? My first time ever in Calgary was in 2007 for two days of which I never came back untill I moved there in Sept.

However I tend to agree with Wooster, especially if the cafe succeeds in supporting "legitimate" uses of the park. another example was walking down and seeing the new green space near Victoria Crossing, which had children playing.
If you compare and contrast this park with one say like century garden then I'm sure you will find vast differences in both design and level of intergration of the green space into the surrounding urban fabric.